SECRETORY IMMUNOGLOBULIN-A ANTIBODIES TO THE GALACTOSE-INHIBITABLE ADHERENCE PROTEIN IN THE SALIVA OF PATIENTS WITH AMEBIC LIVER-DISEASE

Citation
Bl. Kelsall et al., SECRETORY IMMUNOGLOBULIN-A ANTIBODIES TO THE GALACTOSE-INHIBITABLE ADHERENCE PROTEIN IN THE SALIVA OF PATIENTS WITH AMEBIC LIVER-DISEASE, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 51(4), 1994, pp. 454-459
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Tropical Medicine
ISSN journal
00029637
Volume
51
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
454 - 459
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9637(1994)51:4<454:SIATTG>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies directed against the 260-kD galactose-inhibitabl e adherence protein (GIAP) of Entamoeba histolytica inhibit binding of amebic trophozoites to purified colonic mucins, suggesting that anti- GIAP secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA) may have a role in host defense in invasive amebiasis. We determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent a ssay (ELISA) whether a salivary anti-GIAP sIgA response was present in patients from the Republic of South Africa with invasive E. histolyti ca infection. In 13 patients with amebic Liver abscess (ALA), salivary anti-GIAP sIgA was significantly higher (mean +/- SD optical density [OD] = 0.448 +/- 0.258) than that determined for seven South African a dult patients hospitalized with nonamebic illness (0.084 +/- 0.072; P = 0.002), seven healthy South African Adults (0.194 +/- 0.119: P = 0.0 25), and seven healthy adults from Charlottesville, Virginia (0.036 +/ - 0.023; P = 0.004). Of the patients with ALA, nine had acute disease, and four had been cured of amebiasis 2-8 months previously. There was no significant difference between these two groups in the anti-GIAP s IgA levels. ALI ALA patients had a high titer serum anti-amebic antibo dy response, and there was no direct correlation between the level of anti-GIAP salivary IgA and anti-GIAP serum antibodies (R = 0.187). The se findings demonstrate that the E. histolytica GIAP is a mucosal anti gen in naturally occurring invasive E. histolytica infection.